Marion Morrison
Diamond Member
- Feb 10, 2017
- 59,298
- 16,837
- 2,190
- Banned
- #6,141
"It ain't legal huntin' alligator down in the swamp, boy"
It is these day!
It is these day!
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A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
Oosie, I used to have a Chinese version of this same instrument here (apparently I was in San Francisco with too much money in my pocket and wandered into a music store).
With your post as an introduction to what it's supposed to sound like here's Luna Lee with what it's not supposed to sound like but you get a good view .. multitracked...
and solo....
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
Oosie, I used to have a Chinese version of this same instrument here (apparently I was in San Francisco with too much money in my pocket and wandered into a music store).
With your post as an introduction to what it's supposed to sound like here's Luna Lee with what it's not supposed to sound like but you get a good view .. multitracked...
and solo....
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
Oosie, I used to have a Chinese version of this same instrument here (apparently I was in San Francisco with too much money in my pocket and wandered into a music store).
With your post as an introduction to what it's supposed to sound like here's Luna Lee with what it's not supposed to sound like but you get a good view .. multitracked...
and solo....
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
Oosie, I used to have a Chinese version of this same instrument here (apparently I was in San Francisco with too much money in my pocket and wandered into a music store).
With your post as an introduction to what it's supposed to sound like here's Luna Lee with what it's not supposed to sound like but you get a good view .. multitracked...
and solo....
Here is Luna Lee with her version of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick In The Wall"....she NEEDS to do a version of "Ghost Riders In The Sky"
I think David Gilmour and Co. would approve and at 2 minutes and 14 seconds she gets very interesting.
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
Oosie, I used to have a Chinese version of this same instrument here (apparently I was in San Francisco with too much money in my pocket and wandered into a music store).
With your post as an introduction to what it's supposed to sound like here's Luna Lee with what it's not supposed to sound like but you get a good view .. multitracked...
and solo....
Here is Luna Lee with her version of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick In The Wall"....she NEEDS to do a version of "Ghost Riders In The Sky"
I think David Gilmour and Co. would approve and at 2 minutes and 14 seconds she gets very interesting.
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
Oosie, I used to have a Chinese version of this same instrument here (apparently I was in San Francisco with too much money in my pocket and wandered into a music store).
With your post as an introduction to what it's supposed to sound like here's Luna Lee with what it's not supposed to sound like but you get a good view .. multitracked...
and solo....
Here is Luna Lee with her version of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick In The Wall"....she NEEDS to do a version of "Ghost Riders In The Sky"
I think David Gilmour and Co. would approve and at 2 minutes and 14 seconds she gets very interesting.
She's all over the map with her song choices, but she is meticulous in mimicking the solos isn't she?
Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, BB King, nothing intimidates her.
Here's her Layla, again multitracked with two instruments for the key changes:
Sadly in some of her more recent vids she's starting to sing. Bad idea.
You can write to her to suggest Ghost Riders.
A timely old chestnut, good stuff.
From the same era another chestnut........ Circus Maximus "Wind"
I have been collecting for some time Traditional Korean Folk Music records, I have some from North Korea but I cannot find what I have on records on YouTube so I cannot post anything so I am posting some South Korean Folk Music because on YouTube I can find some that I have on record like Hwang Byungki.
Hwang Byungki who died in January 2018 was a virtuoso of a traditional Korean instrument the kayagûm a 12 string instrument very much like a zither, but not a zither. Hwang Byungki specialise in a type of Korean Folk Music called the Sanjo which is purely instrumental and very intricate and also very delicate and it was specifically developed for the kayagûm between 1890-1891 by Kim Chang-jo. Sanjo itself is in a Sub-Genre of Traditional Korean Folk Music, the Sub-Genre is called Minsogak but unlike pure Sanjo which is instrumental Minsogak also includes singing. With Hwang Byungki there is no singing.
Hwang Byungki "Kayagûm Masterpieces Vol. 4 - Spring Snow" released in 2001 on C&L Music.
The below contain five movements they are:
I. "Spring Snow: Calm Morning"
II. "Spring Snow: Peacefully"
III. "Spring Snow: Mysteriously"
IV. "Spring Snow: Humorously"
V. "Spring Snow: Excitedly"
Hwang Byungki - Wikipedia
Oosie, I used to have a Chinese version of this same instrument here (apparently I was in San Francisco with too much money in my pocket and wandered into a music store).
With your post as an introduction to what it's supposed to sound like here's Luna Lee with what it's not supposed to sound like but you get a good view .. multitracked...
and solo....
Here is Luna Lee with her version of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick In The Wall"....she NEEDS to do a version of "Ghost Riders In The Sky"
I think David Gilmour and Co. would approve and at 2 minutes and 14 seconds she gets very interesting.
She's all over the map with her song choices, but she is meticulous in mimicking the solos isn't she?
Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, BB King, nothing intimidates her.
Here's her Layla, again multitracked with two instruments for the key changes:
Sadly in some of her more recent vids she's starting to sing. Bad idea.
You can write to her to suggest Ghost Riders.
Yes her solos are very impressive.
Nooooooooooooooooooooooooo her singing is going to RUIN everything, she needs to be told to stop ANY singing and just continue the instrumentals. Yes perhaps should email her and suggest she does a version of "Ghost Riders In The Sky"